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Penn State Football Graduation Rates Soar Above National Average

It’s usually like Christmas at Penn State every time the annual NCAA graduation report comes out. This year was no different — the rates were released today, and Penn State’s numbers were stellar across the board.

These numbers are always delayed to account for longer-than-usual graduation times. In this case, the data is for student athletes who started school during the 2003-04 through the 2006-07 academic year — and in the case of football, the numbers still reflect the Joe Paterno era.

88 percent of all Penn State student-athletes graduated during this evaluation, which is seven percentage points higher than the national Graduation Success Rate of 81 percent and the fourth highest GSR in the Big Ten. An incredible eight teams — men’s and women’s basketball, field hockey, men’s golf, women’s lacrosse, softball, and men’s and women’s tennis — posted GSRs of 100 percent.

As for Penn State football, the numbers were predictably stellar. The football team’s GSR of 85 percent was second in the Big Ten and 15 percentage points higher than the Division 1 and FBS average. That number is slightly down from last report’s record setting 91 percent GSR, but it is still an incredible figure.

Penn State continues to be one of the NCAA’s gold standards for graduating African-American athletes, with 88 percent of athletes receiving a college degree. That number is 22 percentage points higher than the national average, and second in the Big Ten behind only Northwestern.

In fact, Penn State scored above the national average in every measurable category (click to enlarge).

To see Penn State’s graduation rates across all sports, or for graduation rates across Division 1 athletics, there is a database on the NCAA’s website.

Time and time again, this man is proven wrong.

“Our goal is not to be just punitive but to make sure the university establishes an athletic culture and daily mindset in which football will never again be placed ahead of educating, nurturing and protecting young people.” – Mark Emmert

The men of Mute Cities don’t want to be the usual, run-of-the-mill bar band. They have aspirations beyond State College, not wanting to be stuck in the trap of being a band that never gets out of Happy Valley.